Edward Drake Building | |
---|---|
Édifice Edward-Drake | |
Former names | CBC Building |
General information | |
Status | Completed |
Architectural style | Modernist |
Address | 1500 Bronson Avenue Ottawa, Ontario K1G 3J5 |
Construction started | 1961 |
Completed | 1964 |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 6 |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | D.G. McKinstry |
The Edward Drake Building (French: Édifice Edward-Drake), formerly the CBC Building, was the name of a modernist office building in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada designed by CBC's chief architect David Gordon McKinstry and constructed between 1961 and 1964.[1]
It originally served as the headquarters of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, but significant CBC budget cutbacks in the 1990s led to the relocation of the head office staff in 1997. The building was later occupied by the Communications Security Establishment (CSE) and was renamed in honour of the first director of its predecessor organisation, the Communications Branch of the National Research Council.
The building occupies a large site bordered by Riverside Drive, Heron Road and Bronson Avenue. For more than four decades, it has been a landmark in south Ottawa as it is set apart from any other buildings, and it was particularly known for the large CBC/Radio Canada logo on one wing of the building (since removed). It has been designated as a "classified federal heritage building," which means that it is a federal government building that has been assigned the highest level of heritage protection.[1]
On February 26, 2015, CSE's new facility in Ottawa's east end was officially named the Edward Drake Building.[2]